Elements of the rural landscape
-
Upload
julian-swindell -
Category
Education
-
view
360 -
download
6
description
Transcript of Elements of the rural landscape
Elements of the rural landscape
The bits that make up the landscape:
The bits we map
Elements of the rural landscape
• Elements of the landscape: the things it is built up from and which give it its particular character
• Some of the elements are continuous, such as soils, relief, land cover
• Other elements are discrete, such as roads, buildings, field boundaries.
• The variations in elements can exercise enormous influence on the character of the landscape
Transport as an element of the rural landscape
The presence of transport routes
• Neolithic technology required the use of high quality flint, which can be traced to its source.
• Flint tools from the Lake District and East Anglia have been found all over the country, so there must have been a transport system to move them over. Almost certainly on foot.
• Before rivers were managed and land drained, huge areas of marsh required built wooden “roads” to give access to farmland and places of security. Somerset Levels have revealed several such walkways
Pre-historic transport routes
A reconstruction of the Sweet Track in the Somerset Levels, approx 3,600 BC
The Ridgeway over the Marlborough Downs, age impossible to establish
Roman roads
The Fosseway today
Packhorse tracks
• Few routes could be covered by wheeled vehicles in the middle ages. Most goods, even fresh foods, were transported by Pack horse
• Packhorse tracks are narrow, as direct as possible, and often worn deep into the landscape through centuries of use.
Livestock to market
• The major Markets for meat were London and the south coast ports, to supply the Navy with salt beef and pork.
• The main fat stock production regions were Wales and Scotland.
• How were the cattle transported to market?
• They walked. (Even geese and ducks walked)
Drove roads
• Drove roads were continuous meadows, fenced to keep cattle out of farm land.
• The roads were very wide and provided grazing.
• Towns along the routes provided secure village greens were stock rested
• If the pub is called the Drovers arms, it is on a drove road
Canals-the first alternative to roads
Current navigable canals All canals and navigable rivers
Impact of canals on the landscape
• Canals create unbroken lines through the landscape– Water– Boat transport– Pedestrian access– Vegetation– Wildlife
• Enormous potential for livelihood generation within the countryside.
Railways-the end of commercial waterways?
• Railways brought speed, almost unlimited carrying capacity and access to difficult terrain
• The routes are incompatible with recreation but good for wildlife.
• Railways killed off drove roads for moving livestock and effectively killed off narrow canals
• Railways killed off local vernacular architecture. All building materials now available everywhere
Impact of railways on the rural landscape
• Railways in themselves have relatively little physical impact on the landscape, but they brought people into the countryside.
• “Metroland”, the suburbia surrounding the big cities, grew into the countryside along the routes of the new 19th and 20th century rail network
• Any transport system which brings rapid, cheap travel will bring pressure on areas which were once considered remote and inaccessible.
Return of he road
Croatia England
Austria
Harnhill, 1995 and 2002: more and more roads
20021995
Airports + cheap flights-the next pressure on the landscape
• The countryside is the only place with enough room for airports
• Current pressures in Cheshire (Manchester) and Essex (Stansted) with possible major development in Thames Estuary
• Cheap flights are now available to Cornwall from London: £30 and 30 minutes and you are in the Southwest.
Buildings-a defining element of the rural landscape
• People need buildings, we cannot survive in even temperate climates without shelter
• The very definition of rural rather than wilderness implies the presence of human activity = buildings
• The nature of most cherished buildings derives from their setting and their materials. The concept of vernacular architecture comes from the unconscious use of local materials in traditional ways
Vernacular means locally sourced and locally cheap
Austria: timber & local stone; prosperous
Canada: local logs for walls and wooden shingles: poor
Vietnam: local bamboo & leaf: poor
Kerala: local coconut palm; prosperousTamil Nadu: farm waste
materials: impoverished
Fields: patches in the landscape
Change in field shapes and boundaries
1995
1972
2004
Eysey Manor farm
Field systems
Céide Fields: Co. MayoNeolithic 5,000 years old Crofting systems: Scotland
Medieval fields and woods
Enclosed fields
International field patterns 1
Cotswolds
Netherlands
International field patterns 2
Ireland- west
South Africa
Field boundaries
• Walls, fences, hedges, ditches, banks
• Can give the essential texture to the landscape
Walls
• Vernacular stone field walls of two types– Quarried stone: stone is sourced from a
quarry and shaped for the wall
– Field stone: boulders are cleared from the field and used for the enclosing walls
Hedgerows
• Hedgerows often seen as the quintessential feature of the “English “ rural landscape
• Rule of thumb on age: number of hedgerow species equals hedgerow age in centuries
• The hedges below are probably only 200 years old
Fences
• Generally unloved, but are a feature of modern farm landscapes
• Barbed wire fencing invented in 19th century America during the Civil War…
Canadian wooden fencing, the local vernacular
Field patterns in different cultures
Austria: open field systems. No boundaries at all unless there is livestock, which is not usual at low level
Kerala: crops grown on islands. Water creates boundaries but is also used for transport and fish rearing.
Vietnam: rice grown in flooded paddy fields. No boundaries visible
Farming practice influencing landscape: permanent crops
Spain: olive groves; centuries
Costa Rica: coffee, years
Kerala: tea: decades
Elements of the rural landscape summary
• These landscape elements form the bits (the entities) that we will use to build models of the landscape
• You can’t understand the history of the landscape or know why people value and cherish it just by adding up all the bits, but you do need to know what the bits are and how they fit into the whole landscape picture.